Írásaim - mis cosas

La iláha Ill'Állah,
Mohammed rassul Állah!!
I am a muslim, and i am proud of that!
Muszlim vagyok, és büszke vagyok rá!
"Én a halálban csak a boldogságot látom,
míg a zsarnokság alatt csak a boldogtalanságot"
Husszein Imám - - I am a traveler seeking the Truth, a human searching for the meaning of humanity, and a citizen seeking dignity, freedom, stability and welfare under the shade of Islam. I am a free man who is aware of the purpose of his existence and calls, truly, my prayer and my sacrifice, my life and my death, are all for Allah, the Cherisher of the worlds; He has no partner. This I am commanded and I am among those who submit to His Will. This is who I am. Who are you?
Founder of the hungarian National Anarchist Party - A magyar Nemzeti Anarchista Párt(N.A.P.)alapítója

This painting from a 16th-century copy of the Persian historian Mirkhvand’s Rawzat al-Safa (Garden of Purity) shows Timur receiving envoys during his 1370 attack on Balkh, now in northern Afghanistan. It was a far larger embassy that came to him 25 years later, bearing the first of two letters from the Ming court of China that Timur found profoundly insulting.

REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN/ LOUVRE / BRIDGEMAN ART LIBRARYIn 1400, at the age of 67 or 68, Ibn Khaldun was compelled bythe Mamluk sultan al-Nasir to travel to Damascus in an effortto convince the Turco-Mongol conqueror Timur to spare the city.But the talks failed, and Damascus was mercilessly attacked.

The flowers of Timur

The Great Timur Empire (Büyük Timur İmparatorluğu)

Alleged flag of the Great Timur Empire - Image by Ivan Sache, 4 July 2004

Official description: Founded by Timur Gurgani bordering the Balkans in the West, the Volga in the North, Indian Ocean in the South and Central Asia in the EastAdditional information: Quoting R.F. Tapsell, Monarchs, Rulers, Dynasties and Kingdoms of the World, 1983:

Timurids: Barlas Turkish family founded by Timur (Tamerlane), who rose to power in the mid-XIVth century in Transoxiana and spent his long reign in far-ranging and immensely destructive campaigns, overrunning Iran, Iraq, Asia Minor and the domain of the Golden Horde in Southern Russia. He sacked Delhi in 1398 and temporarily broke the power of the Ottoman Turks at Ankara in 1402. On his death his large empire in Iran and Transoxiana became divided among his descendants and shrank rapidly over the XVth century amid family quarrels. The last minor prince of the dynasty, Babür, was expelled from Farghana by the Shaibanids, conquerors of Transoxiana, and established himself at Kabul. In 1526, he defeated and killed the Lodi sultan of Delhi, becoming master of northern India and founding the Moghul empire.

Recent studies have shown that this Empire was a Mongol state but official Turkish sources still consider it as Turk.

Flag: The alleged flag of the Great Timur Empire is blue with three white disks placed 1 + 2 in the middle of the flag.

Ivan Sache, Jarig Bakker & Onur Özgün, 4 July 2004

Other reported flag of the Great Timur Empire - Image by Jarig Bakker, 15 July 2003

In Flags of the World 1669-1670, edited by Kl. Sierksma, 1966 [sie66] is a flag on p. 271 with caption "TAMERLANE". This particular flag nowhere has its counterpart. It is not to be found in the Sketchbook, a Napolitan manuscript from c. 1666&.Nevertheless it can almost certainly be defined as the flag of the empire of Tamerlane, inasmuch as we read in Cleirac (pages 67 and 68) [cle47]:

Tamerlan, the scourge of Asia, wanted (? provided souloit is indeed vouloit, the ancient form of voulait) to hoist his three-coloured ensigns, white, red and black, colours of peace, blood and death.

The full source is: Cleirac, Estienne: Explication des termes de marine employés dans les dicts, ordonances et réglemens de l'admirat ... Jacques Mongiron Millanges, Bordeaux, 1647. -4to, First edition 1636.I suppose that Cleirac based his remarks on the travel-book of Ruy Gonzalez de Clavijo, who travelled to the court of Timur 1403-1406, and wrote the Historia del gran Tamurlan e itinerario, which appeared in the Hakluyt series in English translation in 1859 (1st series, no. 26).